Hope fell off a horse yesterday.
She isn’t hurt. Not really.
Yesterday afternoon, however, her wails echoed clearly across the canyon.
She was wearing her helmet and was jogging Blondie in the arena. A neighbor on horseback passed on the trail adjacent to the arena at the exact moment Hope exhibited her refined skills of inattention. The other horse must have startled Blondie and because Hope wasn’t paying attention, she simply toppled over on to the dirt.
She rode on a bareback pad which has no stirrups and no saddle horn. Aside from a short strap where the horn should be, there really isn’t anything to grab onto. She has only been riding for 2 years and she hasn’t really learned to fall well yet. As soon as Hope felt unstable she should have grabbed the strap on the pad. She might have regained enough balance to fall on her feet rather than her hip and back.
She screamed and began to cry as her instructor calmly walked over to where she had landed. She spoke to her quietly and after making sure she wasn’t more than just a little bruised and scared, asked her to find the reins. Hope continued to yell as she stood up awkwardly and walked around Blondie to find the reins she had dropped in her distress.
She hopped back up on the horse with a groan and her teacher’s help. Still crying softly, she walked her horse around the arena, slow and quietly. After a few minutes, her instructor explained to her why she fell and how she could have grabbed the strap to help. She probably still would have slid off the bareback pad, but she might not have landed as hard on her rear end.
Hope nodded with a few leftover tears on her cheeks. I think she learned and hopefully next time she falls (because she will fall again), she’ll think quickly and try to land upright.
It isn’t if we will fall, but merely when. Anything that requires skill and discipline carries both reward and risk and a certain amount of failure is inevitable. But, failure makes us learn.
Part of it is learning how to fall well, to regain our balance and land on our feet.









